Put it this way, I can't hear a difference. The upstream preamp/vol control chips and the dacs are the same anyway.
That's good news. I wonder why reviews say that Marantz is more for music and Denon movies....
if they are literally the same thing under different a chassis, how do people come to that conclusion?
@PENG[/QUOTE]
Good question, but who are those "
people", magazine reviewer, brand loyal fans and owners? People who are probably more of the objective type would not likely have told you such things mostly derived from hearsay, examples: Me, Ryan, IRV also own Marantz product (s) with and/or without HDAM. Even
@AcuDefTechGuy, who regularly recommend Yamaha's now, used to own a Denon AVR-3312CI (iirc) and didn't seem to have issues using it to drive his super expensive B&W 802 D2, and I highly doubt he would not use those speakers for music..
To be clear, HDAM, aka hyper dynamic amplifier modules sure sound like some marketing jargon as you mentioned, but if you look at the hardware and design, it is actually a buffer stage, no jargon at all!!. Marantz's websites (
https://www.us.marantz.com/blog/pages/posts.aspx?pid=11 ) do provide information on their claimed benefits. The latest version found on the 2015 through 2018 models is basically an unity gain buffer stage that seems to be an extra stage added to the otherwise practically identical DAC/preamp/vol control section of the corresponding (i.e. 6012/7012/X4400H). It buffers between the preamp output and power amp input, but one may logically argue that regardless of what it does, sound quality related matters have already been determined by the weakest link upstream, i.e. the DAC and preamp/vol control ICs/Op amps. In the recent Audioholics.com review on the flag ship AVR-X8500H, the reviewer has high praise of the sound quality of the Denon, even compared it to "separates", that's again subjective obviously, but note that the $3999 Denon does not have HDAM either so is the $3000 less expensive Marantz SR5012 better suited for music? I don't know, just doesn't sound logical to me..
At the end of the day, based on the lowest Amazon.com price I have seen so far, at one point it was a case of $899 for the X4400H vs the $999 7012. When those prices were on, I typically recommend the 7012 to people who seemed to care more about subjective reviews, and Denon to those who appear to care more about specs and measurements. If the price difference is greater than $300, then I find it hard to recommend the 7012 or the 6012 over the X4400H. This appears to be the case (significant street price difference) now, and that's why I think you need more details regarding the differences, in order to make a more informed decision.